Zoofolkloristics: Imagination as a Critical Component
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
Religion is always right. Religion protects us against that |
great problem which we all must face. Science is always wrong; |
it is the very artifice of men. Science can never solve one problem |
without raising ten more problems. |
—Bernard Shaw [1] (p. 16) |
1. Introduction
it makes us spend our time justifying as rational the beliefs we inherit, instead of calling into question their foundations (…) Whereas science should be a free inquiry, it consists only in gibberish discussions on how we should read Aristotle or Galen. Critical judgement is systematically silenced.[4] (n.p.)
2. Historical Animals
3. Narratives
4. Imagination
Animals can be engaged with, looked for, traced, understood, and appreciated in new ways by humans opening up themselves to new ways of ‘reading’ and ‘writing’ them (…) But to do this is to tap into new ideas of what it means to represent, and to make representations, in the senses of both what it can involve and who can do it.[71] (p. 115)
4.1. Animals Bury the Hunter
- (a)
- According to one view, the song belongs to the literary cycle of mundus inversus (‘the world turned upside down’) [73]: nonhuman animals take on human behaviours and inter-relations in an ironic symbolisation or metaphorisation of relations within the human species—specifically, in this case, the relation between the feudal master and the serfs. Essentially, the song functions as a disguised critique of (human) social relations.
- (b)
- According to a second view [74], the song is a critique and juxtaposition of two separate but hierarchically comparable classes within the (human) society: in this case, for instance, farmers may be mocking the hunters who work for the feudal master and belong to a different social stratum.
- (c)
- A third view, in line with the tenets of zoofolkloristics, describes the song as a representation of a time and place, or perhaps simply a frame of mind, in which humans do not consider nonhuman animals as mere automata, devoid of intrinsic value, ‘objects’ towards whom humans have no moral obligations (e.g., regarding the equality of human and nonhuman animals before the law and God, as reflected in a 1587 animal trial [75]). The ballad is not a depiction of a world turned upside down; instead, it belongs to the category of (nonhuman) animal resistance [76,77]: the animals show agency when they decide to kill and bury the hunter, and with the funeral ritual, they say goodbye to the hated and feared oppressor and sigh with relief. The transfer of a human ritual into the nonhuman world shows that nonhuman lives also matter and perhaps even that the nonhuman animal world is a lot more complex than most humans recognise. The song could be a reflection of a guilty conscience and a manifestation of the capacity for empathic identification with our animal kin. Ironisation with inversion of the human into the nonhuman seems to often have been the only way of representing a departure from normativity [78,79]. If the author’s or authors’ only purpose was to expose the problem of the killing of free-living animals and the fear and subsequent relief of these animals, the goal has been achieved.
4.2. About a Doggie
Once upon a time there was a little doggie, they tortured him at the homestead, they broke his leggie. He worked so hard that he broke the chain, you see, he broke the chain and said that he was going abroad, that he would never come back to this homestead.(Archive of the Institute of Ethnology ZRC SAZU, Archive ISN, R10/2, T 205 A 2 (2), 82–169. Translated by the present authors.)
4.3. About a Pig
- For a while I was thinking about it,
- And trying to get out of it.
- Because I’m too fearful,
- Not vigorous enough.
- This is what I want to tell you:
- The way the pig looked at me!
- When I came into the barn
- He thought I was bringing him food.
Carol Adams notes:
Through butchering, animals become absent referents. Animals in name and body are made absent as animals for meat to exist. Animals’ lives precede and enable the existence of meat. If animals are alive they cannot be meat. Thus a dead body replaces the live animal. Without animals there would be no meat eating, yet they are absent from the act of eating meat because they have been transformed into food.[89] (pp. 20–21)
5. Conclusions
Readers understand that the actual animals in the story do not exist and were not abused. However, similar animals do exist and are abused in similar ways. Different parts of a story may resonate more or less strongly with individual readers, whereas with a philosophical argument, if one premise is considered inadequate, the whole of the conclusion may be deemed invalid.[102] (p. 1)
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Brooks Pribac, T.; Golež Kaučič, M. Zoofolkloristics: Imagination as a Critical Component. Animals 2024, 14, 928. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14060928
Brooks Pribac T, Golež Kaučič M. Zoofolkloristics: Imagination as a Critical Component. Animals. 2024; 14(6):928. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14060928
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrooks Pribac, Teya, and Marjetka Golež Kaučič. 2024. "Zoofolkloristics: Imagination as a Critical Component" Animals 14, no. 6: 928. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14060928